preservation metadata

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Metadata can play a vital role in enabling the effective management, discovery, and re-usability of digital information. Digital preservation metadata provides provenance information, supports and documents preservation activity, identifies technical features, and aids in verifying the authenticity of a digital object. This presentation gives and introduction to Digital preservation matadata and preservation metada in practise. Presentation was delivered during the joint DPE/Planets/CAPAR/nestor training event, ‘The Preservation challenge: basic concepts and practical applications’ (Barcelona, March 2009)

TRANSCRIPT

Digital Preservation Metadata

Angela Dappert The British Library, Planets, PREMIS EC

Barcelona March 2009

Some of the slides on PREMIS are based on slides byPriscilla Caplan, Florida Center for Library Automation

Rebecca Guenther, Library of CongressBrian Lavoie, OCLC

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

What is Digital Preservation Metadata?

Metadata = data about data

Information that is essential to ensure long-term accessibility of digital resources

What is Digital Preservation Metadata?

A best guess on the future– little experience with digital objects– uncertain future technical possibilities– uncertain future legal framework in which we will

operate

Digital objects must be self-descriptive

Must be able to exist independently from the systems which were used to create them– XML (machine and human readable)

Why do we need new forms of metadata?

- Use Cases

Supporting New Features

MetaD: Semantic Information for the designated community

Technology Dependence

0001.tiff 0002.tiff 0003.tiff 0004.tiff 000156.tiff0005.tiff 0006.tiff

No direct access • Not self-descriptive• Complex formats

Complex environments

digital

Technology Dependence

MetaD:– need for detailed rendering information

• Software• Hardware• Other dependencies: schemas, style sheets,

encodings, etc.– need for format information

Complex Structures

0001.tiff 0002.tiff 0003.tiff 0004.tiff 000156.tiff0005.tiffabstract34.htm

header.gif

thumb.jpg

Physical structural relationships• Embedded files• File sequence

MetaD: need for structural descriptions

0001.tiff 0002.tiff 0003.tiff 0004.tiff 000156.tiff0005.tiff 0006.tiffabstract34.

htm

Title PageTable of Contents

Page 1 Page 2 Page 154Page 3 Page 4Web abstract

Chapter 1 Chapter 2

• Logical structural relationships

Complex Structures

MetaD: need for structural descriptions

Mutability

Intentional or accidental change

Decay: rapid and potentially complete

Mutability

Viability: the object is readable

Action:– Sound storage management practices, including climate control– Choice of resilient file formats– Media refreshment

(copying data from one storage device to another)

MetaD:– Data carrier metadata

• type of medium • its preservation characteristics • age of medium• date of recording• usage patterns

Mutability

Fixity: the object is unchanged

Action: – Regularly compute checksums (>=2)

MetaD:– Checksums, message digests – Event creating them

• Hash algorithms creating them• Date/Time• Originator

Mutability

Integrity: the object is whole and unimpaired

Action:– format identification and validation– structural information:

all files are there all files are named correctly

MetaD:– event information for format identification and

validation events– structural metadata

Mutability

Authenticity: the object is what it purports to be

Action:– Procedural: virus protection

firewalls tight authentication intrusion detection immediate attention to security alerts

– Technical: replicationdigital signatures

MetaD:– Provenance metadata (events and agents)– Digital signatures – Access rights

Obsolescence

Action:– Frequent, pre-emptive preservation actions

(migration, emulation)– During copyright period– Potential loss of object characteristics

MetaD:– Provenance metadata: history of all actions performed on the

resource + custodianship• changes and decisions• dates• agents (decision maker + tools used)

– Preservation action rights information– Significant properties

0001.tiff 0002.tiff 0003.tiff 0004.tiff 000156.tiff0005.tiff 0006.tiffabstract34.

htm

recto verso versorecto verso

• Original source• Related items (e.g. migration source)

Context Descriptions

MetaD: need for context descriptions

Preservation Pyramid (from Priscilla Caplan)

Conventional metadata categories with new functions

Administrative: – NOW: vendor, shelf marks, submission information– technical download or upload information, – technical format specification of directory structures, files,

schemata– …

Descriptive :– greater granularity, descriptive information on more levels:

journal -> issue -> article -> words (indexing for search engines) -> images contained, etc.;

– more granularity in rights; – less subject information (?) because of automated search; – more facet information (?) to support faceted search

Conventional metadata categories with new functions

Structural: – Now: issue belongs to journal, song is part of CD, …– greater granularity -> logical structural relationships;

physical structural relationships, – …

Technical– Now: dimensions of book, …– size in bytes, – number of files, – file formats, – environment, – hash functions– …

Conventional metadata categories with new functions

Metadata needed for resource discovery and delivery (e.g. structural information, rendering environment information) is also preservation metadata.

Additionally• made explicit for future generations• anticipating future uses • anticipating what will go wrong with the digital

object

Preservation Metadata Categories -OAIS

OAIS Model Preservation Metadata Categories

Reference Information

enumerates and describes identifiers assigned to the Content Information such that it can be referred to

unambiguously, both internally and externally to

the archive

e.g., ISBN, URN

Archival System Identification

Global Identification

Resource Description

OAIS Model preservation metadata categories

Preservation Description Information– Reference Information: to

enumerate and describe identifiers

– Provenance Information: to document the history of the content information (creation, modification, custody)

– Context Information: to document the relationship of the content to its environment

– Fixity Information: to document authentication mechanisms

Provenance Information

documents the history of

the Content Information

Ingest Process History- Institution- Event Date/Time- Event Type- Event DescriptionPreservation History- Institution- Action Date/Time- Action Type- Action Description- Technical Device

OAIS Model preservation metadata categories

Preservation Description Information– Reference Information: to

enumerate and describe identifiers

– Provenance Information: to document the history of the content information (creation, modification, custody)

– Context Information: to document the relationship of the content to its environment

– Fixity Information: to document authentication mechanisms

OAIS Model preservation metadata categories

Preservation Description Information– Reference Information: to

enumerate and describe identifiers

– Provenance Information: to document the history of the content information (creation, modification, custody)

– Context Information: to document the relationship of the content to its environment

– Fixity Information: to document authentication mechanisms

Context Informationdocuments the

relationships of the Content Information to its environment (e.g., why it

was created, relationships to other Content

Information)

- Reason for Creation- Is Version Of- Has Version- Is Replaced By- Replaces (migration)- Is Required By- Requires- Is Part Of- Has Part- Is Referenced By- References- Is Format Of- Has Format- Same Intellectual Content As

Fixity Informationinformation validating the

authenticity ofthe content information

Authentication- Dig. Signature / Watermark / Time Stamp- Checksum- Encryption- Documentation of Auth. Mechanism

OAIS Model preservation metadata categories

Preservation Description Information– Reference Information: to

enumerate and describe identifiers

– Provenance Information: to document the history of the content information (creation, modification, custody)

– Context Information: to document the relationship of the content to its environment

– Fixity Information: to document authentication mechanisms

OAIS model categories

Packaging InformationDescriptive Informationthe information used to aid searching, ordering, and retrieval of the objects

Packaging Information

binds the digital object and its associated metadata into an identifiable unit or package

(i.e., an Archival Information Package)

OAIS model categories

Packaging InformationDescriptive Informationthe information used to aid searching, ordering, and retrieval of the objects

Descriptive Information

that helps users of the archive to locate and access

information of potential

interest.

DC.TitleDC.CreatorDC.SubjectDC.DescriptionDC.PublisherDC.ContributorDC.DateDC.TypeDC.FormatDC.IdentifierDC.SourceDC.LanguageDC.Coverage

OAIS model categories

Content Information – Content Data Object– Representation Information

the information needed for proper rendering, understanding, and interpretation of a content data object

Structure Informationinterprets the bits by organizing them into specific data types, groups of data types,

and other higher-level meanings.

Semantic Informationprovides additional meaning for the

interpretation of the content

E.g. three numbers interpreted as a dateE.g. the text is in English.

Content Data Object Description

detailing the characteristics and features of the Content Data Object itself that are necessary to render and understand its

content.

Environment Descriptiondescribes a hardware/software

environment capable of rendering or displaying the Content Data Object in the

form in which it currently exists in the archival store.

Directory structure and file naming conventionsContent type Component types and their relationships File description Installation requirements Size Access inhibitors Access facilitators Significant properties Functionality Description of rendered content Quirks

Documentation

Software Environment

Hardware Environment

Computational Resources

Storage

Peripherals

Rendering Programs

Operating System

E.g. identify a bit stream as ASCII text

characters,

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Hands-On Exercise

Imaginary eJournal submission (inspired by the Elsevier ScienceServer specification)

You want to collect this content-type in your repository to ensure long-term access.

It is the first time that you see this publisher’s format and you start to think about your metadata needs.

Hands-On Exercise

Goal:

Store metadata in the repository with the content to create complete, self-descriptive units

Specify metadata profiles for archival information packages (AIP)

Creating Metadata Profiles

1. Which objects do we describe?

a. Which?

b. How many?

2. Which metadata do we need?

a. Which do we need?

b. Which do we get?

3. Which standard do we use for which metadata?

Creating Metadata Profiles for eJournals

Answers are based on analysis of the

Concepts in the domain

Sources of objects and metadata

Technical properties of the repository

Use Cases– Functions supported (what is MetaD for?)– Workflow (how is MetaD used?)

Hands-On Exercise

What sorts of digital objects need to be described?

What are the relationships between them?

What descriptive metadata can you find?

Can you tell what events the objects have undergone?

What technical metadata can you find?

What information can you find that supports fixity, integrity and authenticity?

What rights information can you find?

Don’t fret over details!

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Creating Metadata Profiles

1. Which objects do we describe?

a. Which?

b. How many?

What sorts of domain objects are you wanting to preserve?

Do you want to describe intellectual entities, representations, files, bitstreams?

Question 1a: Which objects do we describe?

For eJournals: Journal Issue Article Representation File Submission

Question 1a: Which objects do we describe?

For eJournals: Journal Issue Article Representation File Submission

January/February 2009

Vol. 15 No. 1/2doi:10.1045/dlib.magazine

ISSN: 1082-9873

Question 1a: Which objects do we describe?

For eJournals: Journal Issue Article Representation File Submission

A Policy Checklist for Enabling Persistence of Identifiers Nick Nicholas, Nigel Ward, and Kerry Blinco, Link Affiliates doi:10.1045/january2009-nicholas

provider specificXMLHTMLPDF

not identical content

Question 1a: Which objects do we describe?

For eJournals: Journal Issue Article Representation File Submission

Question 1a: Which objects do we describe?

For eJournals: Journal Issue Article Representation File Submission

Thumb.jpg in the XML representation

packages contain all the content files, metadata, manifests; for convenience, records provenance information (events) that are shared by many files

Question 1a: Which objects do we describe?

For eJournals: Journal Issue Article Representation File Submission

Question 1b : How many objects do we implement?

For eJournals:

Because of the write-once architecture of the Digital Library System, we split objects into chunks which are updated together. This avoids, for example, creating new generations of journal objects with every submission of a new issue.

Example Diagram

Article

Journal

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”series”>

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”series”>

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”preceding”>

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> generation

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> generation

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> generation

Issue

Manifes-tation

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:accessCondition>

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <mets:mdref>

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> manifestationOf

<premis: event><premis:eventType> metadataUpdate

<premis: event><premis:eventType> metadataUpdate

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”host”>

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”host”>

metadataUpdateeventType>

Policy Files

Preservation Plan

File

METS File

Content File

PREMIS link

METS link

MODS link

Creating Metadata Profiles

2. Which metadata do we need?

a. Which do we need?

b. Which do we get?

Question 2a: Which metadata do we need?

Which functions are supported by the system and what information do they need?– For how long do you want to retain the digital objects?– How intensive are your preservation needs?– What technical metadata do you need to record to

perform your business processes?– What other metadata do you need to record to

perform your business processes?– How diverse is your user base? Does this influence

your preservation needs?– How self-documenting are your digital objects?

Question 2a: Which metadata do we need?

Which functions are supported by the system and what information do they need?– Can the repository demonstrate the fixity, integrity,

authenticity of archived materials?– What preservation strategies (migration,

normalization, emulation, cannonicalization, etc.) will the system implement; how will it use metadata in this process?

Which relationships exist between objects?Which events, agents, rights do we describe?– Which of these events change the objects or their

metadata?

Question 2a: Which metadata do we need?

For eJournals:

Which functions are supported by the system and what information do they need?

Preservation, technical requirements, resource discovery, management information, reading room, …

Preservation metadata does not exist in isolation!

Question 2a: Which metadata do we need?

For eJournals:

Which relationships exist between objects?

– generation, part-of, host, migrated-from, series, preceding, manifestation-of, …

Which events, agents, rights do we describe?

– Accession, validation, virus check, uncompress, metadata extraction, format identification, migration, …

Question 2b: Which metadata can we get?

For eJournals:

Many suppliers of eJournals to one repository

Formats of metadata and content are out of the control of the repository

Translators to the internal metadata format need to be written

To guide the writing of translators, the metadata profiles need to be very precise so that the translators will produce high-quality, uniform metadata

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Creation of Metadata

A common metadata framework, used by both the producer and the repository is advantageous.Repositories may have to normalize metadata. The actor who is closest to the information to be used as metadata creates it.

Creation of Metadata

Producer– Events that occur before ingest into the repository– Technical information about the creation of the object– Fixity Information – Context Information – Representation Information– Significant Properties– Intellectual Property rights

Creation of Metadata

Repository

– Extracted technical information (JHOVE, NLNZ extraction

tool)– Extracted structural information (METAe)– Registries– Events at ingest, migration and other points in the life-

cycle– Significant Properties

From Creation to Repository

Negotiation: Submission agreement between producer and repository

• Means of transmission• Verification process• Formats and standards• Process by which the repository can request re-

transmission

Files should be verified • against checksums sent by the producer• with the help of characterisation tools

Manual or Automatic Creation of Metadata

Some metadata needs to be created by hand

Automatic production of metadata is the goal– Higher granularity of description increases the

number of objects to be described

– populated by ingest software – extracted by tools

• JHOVE, NLNZ Metadata Extraction Tool

Metadata Registries

Help interoperability , exchange

Help metadata reuse

Examples– file format: Pronom, GDFR– environment information: Pronom

e.g. for any file format, give list of software that can create, render, edit, identify, validate, extract metadata

– object properties and their extraction: Pronom, XCEL– controlled vocabulary for values: Library of Congress

Metadata Storage

Discrete files – simplest– text files (often using XML tagging)– associated with the digital objects by persistent IDs

Database management system (relational, object-oriented, or XML)– fast access, easy update, and ease of use for query and

reporting– capable of storing a relational model of complex objects– requires a higher level of technical commitment

Embed metadata in the objects themselves – possible with some file formats

Metadata Storage

Metadata stored with the content data files?

– Makes digital objects self-descriptive– Harder to separate the metadata from the content– The same preservation strategies that are applied to

the content can be applied to the metadata.

Metadata Storage

Do you need to store metadata or can it be extracted on the fly?

– For what is it used? Do you need to search by it? – Will you know how to extract it later?

Updating Metadata

Record update as Provenance Information

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Some Metadata Tools

Characterisation– file format identification, validation, characterisation and

assessment– JHOVE, DROID, XCEL characteriser

Registries– file formats, environments, properties, property extraction for

file formats, controlled vocabularies– PRONOM, GDFR, XCEL

Metadata creation and transformation– see

http://www.loc.gov/standards/premis/tools.html– http://www.loc.gov/standards/mets/mets-tools.html

Some Metadata Standards

Descriptive metadata – Dublin Core – Metadata Object Description Schema (MODS) – MARCXML MARC 21 Schema (MARCXML) – VRA Core (description of works of visual culture as well

as the images that document them)

Content-type specific technical metadata

– textMD Schema for Technical Metadata for Text – MIX NISO Technical Metadata for Digital Still Images

Core preservation metadata – PREMIS

Metadata Containers

Often XML basedEncapsulates administrative, structural, and descriptive metadata about digital objectsExtensible: elements from other schemas can be plugged inRecords the structure of digital objects, and the names and locations of the files that comprise those objects.Records relationships among the metadata and among the pieces of the complex objects

METS Container

<techMD>Technical MetaD

<rightsMD>IPR MetaD

<sourceMD>Analog/digital source MetaD

<digiprovMD>Digital provenance MetaD

Inserting Technical Metadata in a METS Document

<mets> <amdSec> <techMD> <mdWrap> <xmlData>

<!-- insert data from different namespace here --> </xmlData> </mdWrap> </techMD> </amdSec> <fileSec /> <structMap /> </mets>

Metadata Containers (cntd.)

Describes and attaches executable behaviour appropriate for content A unit of storage (OAIS AIP) or a transmission format (OAIS SIP or DIP)Content-type independent

Batch processing for creation, processing, retrieval, and presentationText editor, XML editor, or a forms-based user interface built and customized to your collections and to your working environment

Metadata Containers

METS: Metadata Encoding and Transmission Standard

MPEG-21: Digital Item Declaration Language (DIDL)

Fedora Object XML (FOXML)

XFDU

IMS Content Packaging Specification (IMS-CPS)

Sharable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM)

CCSDS XML Packaging Approach in the ESA Data Disposition System

WARC File Format

Open Archives Initiative Object Reuse and Exchange

RAMLET

Preservation Metadata Element Sets

RLG/OCLC Working Group’s A Metadata Framework to Support the Preservation of Digital Objects (=> PREMIS)

OCLC’s Digital Archive Metadata Elements

The National Library of Australia

The National Library of New Zealand’s Metadata Standards Framework

Cornell University Library Proposed Metadata Elements

LMER Long-term Preservation Metadata for Electronic Resources

PREMIS Preservation Metadata: Implementation Strategies

Implementable preservation metadata– rigorously defined– supported by guidelines/recommendations for

management and use– emphasis on automated workflows

Core preservation metadata – Relevant to a wide range of digital preservation systems

and contexts– What most preservation repositories need to know to

preserve digital materials over the long-term

Preservation Metadata Element Sets

Preservation Metadata Element Sets

“Technical neutrality”:– Digital archiving system: no assumptions about specific

archiving technology, system/DB architectures, preservation strategy

– Metadata management: no assumptions about whether metadata is stored locally or in external registry; recorded explicitly or known implicitly; instantiated in one metadata element or multiple elements

– Promotes flexibility, applicability in wide range of contexts

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

The PREMIS Data Dictionary:Information you need to know for preserving digital

documents

Preservation Metadata: Implementation Strategies

Preservation Metadata Element Sets

Scope

What PREMIS DD is:– Common data model for organizing/thinking about

preservation metadata– Guidance for local implementations– Standard for exchanging information packages between

repositories

Scope

What PREMIS DD is not:

– Out-of-the-box solution: Choice of actual elements is driven by your business needs and documented in application profiles.

– All needed metadata: excludes business rules, format-specific technical metadata, descriptive metadata for access, non-core preservation metadata, detailed agent metadata, intellectual entity metadata, information about the metadata itself (e.g., who obtained or recorded a value, when last changed...)

– Lifecycle management of objects outside repository

– Rights management: limited to permissions regarding actions taken within repository

Activities

Data Dictionary (PREMIS 2.0)– http://www.loc.gov/standards/premis/v2/premis-2-0.pdf

Guidelines for using PREMIS with METS (draft available at:)– http://www.loc.gov/standards/premis/premis-mets.html

PREMIS Implementers’ Registry– http://www.loc.gov/standards/premis/premis-registry.php

The PREMIS Data Model

Data model includes:

– Entities: “things” relevant to digital preservation that are described by preservation metadata (Intellectual Entities, Objects, Events, Rights, Agents)

– Relationships between Entities

– Properties of Entities (semantic units)

The PREMIS Data Model

Data model includes:

– Entities: “things” relevant to digital preservation that are described by preservation metadata (Intellectual Entities, Objects, Events, Rights, Agents)

– Relationships between Entities

– Properties of Entities (semantic units)

PREMIS Data Model

IntellectualEntities

Objects

RightsStatements

Agents

Events

Set of content that is considered a single intellectual unit for purposes of management and description (e.g., a book, a photograph, a map, a database)May include other Intellectual Entities (e.g. a website that includes a web page)**Has one or more digital representations**Not fully described in PREMIS DD, but can be linked to in metadata describing digital representation

Intellectual Entities

Examples:Rabbit Run by John Updike (a book)“Maggie at the beach” (a photograph)The Library of Congress Website (a website)The Library of Congress: American Memory Home page (a web page)

Discrete unit of information in digital form“Objects are what the repository actually preserves”Three types of Object:– FILE: named and ordered

sequence of bytes that is known by an operating system

– REPRESENTATION: set of files, including structural metadata, that, taken together, constitute a complete rendering of an Intellectual Entity

– BITSTREAM: data within a file with properties relevant for preservation purposes (but needs additional structure or reformatting to be stand-alone file)

Objects

Examples:chapter1.pdf (a file)chapter1.pdf + chapter2.pdf + chapter3.pdf (representation of a book w/3 chapters) TIFF file containing header and 2 images (2 bitstreams (images), each with own set of properties (semantic units): e.g., identifiers, technical metadata, inhibitors, … )

Object Example: Photo in Two Formats

Intellectual Entity:“Picture of my dog”

Representation1: TIFF version

Representation 2:JPEG2000 version

File 1: dog.TIFF File 2: dog.JP2

Bitstream 1:Embedded metadata

Event

Examples:Validation Event: use JHOVE tool to verify that chapter1.pdf is a valid PDF fileIngest Event: transform an OAIS SIP into an AIP (one Event or multiple Events?)Migration Event: create a new version of an Object in an up-to-date format

An action that involves or impacts at least one Object or Agent associated with or known by the preservation repository Helps document digital provenance. Can track history of Object through the chain of Events that occur during the Objects lifecycleDetermining which Events are in scope is up to the repository (e.g., Events which occur before ingest, or after de-accession)Determining which Events should be recorded, and at what level of granularity is up to the repository

Some eventTypes

Capture Compression

Deaccession Decompression

Decryption Deletion

Dig. signature validation Dissemination

Fixity check Ingestion

Message digest calculation Migration

Normalization Replication

Validation Virus check

Agent

Examples:Priscilla Caplan (a person)Florida Center for Library Automation (an organization)Dark Archive in the Sunshine State implementation (a system)JHOVE version 1.0 (a software program)

Person, organization, or software program/system associated with an Event or a RightAgents are associated only indirectly to Objects through Events or RightsNot defined in detail in PREMIS DD; not considered core preservation metadata beyond identification

Rights

Example:Priscilla Caplan grants FCLA digital repository permission to make three copies of metadata_fundamentals.pdf for preservation purposes.

An agreement with a rights holder that grants permission for the repository to undertake an action(s) associated with an Object(s) in the repository.

Not a full rights expression language; focuses exclusively on permissions that take the form:– Agent X grants Permission

Y to the repository in regard to Object Z.

The PREMIS Data Model

Data model includes:

– Entities: “things” relevant to digital preservation that are described by preservation metadata (Intellectual Entities, Objects, Events, Rights, Agents)

– Relationships between Entities

– Properties of Entities (semantic units)

Relationships

PREMIS Data Dictionary supports expression of relationships between (see arrows):– Different Objects

• Across same level or different levels– Different Entities

Types of relationships:• Structural: relationships between parts of a whole

“A is part of B”, • Derivation: relationships resulting from replication or

transformation of an Object “A is scanned from B”, “A is a version of B”

Relationships are established through reference to Identifiers of other Entities

Relationships between Objects: Which, How, Why

WHICH Objects are related?

HOW are the Objects related?

WHY are the Objects related?– Event?

Example: Structural relationshipFile “is part of” Representation

relationship [part of the description of File]

relationshipType = structural

relationshipSubType = is part of

relatedObjectIdentification [the Web page]

relatedObjectIdentifierType = repositoryID

relatedObjectIdentifierValue = 0385503954

relatedObjectSequence = 0

relatedEventIdentification [none]

File:

graphic.gif

Representation:

Web Page

is part of

Example: Derivation relationshipFile 1 “is source of” File 2

relationship [part of description of File 1]

relationshipType = derivation

relationshipSubType = is source of

relatedObjectIdentification [identifier of File 2]

relatedObjectIdentifierType = repositoryID

relatedObjectIdentifierValue = F004400

relatedObjectSequence [none]

relatedEventIdentification [Migration Event ID]

relatedEventIdentifierType = repEventID

relatedEventIdentifierValue = E0192

relatedEventSequence [none]

File 1(original)

is source of

throughevent

MigrationEvent

File 2(migrated)

The PREMIS Data Model

Data model includes:

– Entities: “things” relevant to digital preservation that are described by preservation metadata (Intellectual Entities, Objects, Events, Rights, Agents)

– Relationships between Entities

– Properties of Entities (semantic units)

Semantic units

A semantic unit is a property of an Entity– Something you need to know about an Object, Event, Agent, Right

Two kinds of semantic unit:– Container: groups together related semantic units– Semantic components: semantic units grouped under the same

container

Example:

ObjectIdentifier [container]

ObjectIdentifierType [semantic component]

ObjectIdentifierValue [semantic component]

Sample Data Dictionary Entry

Semantic unit size Semantic components

None

Definition The size in bytes of the file or bitstream stored in the repository.

Rationale Size is useful for ensuring the correct number of bytes from storage have been retrieved and that an application has enough room to move or process files. It might also be used when billing for storage.

Data constraint Integer Object category Representation File Bitstream Applicability Not applicable Applicable Applicable Examples 2038927 Repeatability Not repeatable Not repeatable Obligation Optional Optional Creation/ Maintenance notes

Automatically obtained by the repository.

Usage notes Defining this semantic unit as size in bytes makes it unnecessary to record a unit of measurement. However, for the purpose of data exchange the unit of measurement should be stated or understood by both partners.

Example: Object Entity

Main types of information– identifier– technical object characteristics– creation information – software and hardware environment– digital signatures – relationships to other objects– links to other types of entity

Example: Object Entity

Main types of information– identifier– technical object characteristics– creation information – software and hardware environment– digital signatures – relationships to other objects– links to other types of entity

Example: objectCharacteristics

Technical properties common to all/most file formats, not format specific

Container for subunits:– compositionLevel– fixity– size– format– creatingApplication– inhibitors– objectCharacteristicsExtension

Example: Object Entity

Main types of information– identifier– technical object characteristics– creation information – software and hardware environment– digital signatures – relationships to other objects– links to other types of entity

Example Semantic Unit:Environment

What is needed to render or use an object– Operating system– Application software– Computing resources

Environment example: ETD (PDF file)

environmentCharacteristic:=known to work

environmentPurpose=render

software/swName=Adobe Acrobat Reader

software/swVersion=6.1

software/swType=renderer

software/swDependency=Windows NT

software/swName= Windows NT

software/swVersion=5.0

software/swType=operatingSystem

hardware/hwName=Intel Pentium II

hardware/hwType=processor

dependency/dependencyName=Mathematica 5.2 True Type math fonts

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Object Exercise

1. Which PREMIS version was used for defining the object?2. What is the identifier of the object?3. Which significant property of the object must be preserved in a preservation

action?4. Which message digest algorithm was used to compute the checksum of the

object?5. What file format has the object6. What is the corresponding registry code that was recorded and which registry

was used to record it?7. What software was used to create the object?8. Which Extension Schema was used to record technical metadata?9. On what data carrier is the object stored?10.What software tools are recommended for rendering the object?11.How many related items are recorded?12.What is the nature of the relationships?13.How many linking events have been recorded?14.What do we know about them?

Event and Agent Exercise

1. What are the types of the 3 events?

2. What is the type of the agent?

3. Are there other agents captured in this information?

4. To what objects do the events link?

5. Are there other objects the events might link to?

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary

• Overview• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Issues in using PREMIS with METS

Which METS sections to use and how many

Whether to record elements redundantly in PREMIS that are defined explicitly in the METS schema

How to record elements that are also part of a format specific technical metadata schema (e.g. MIX)

Recording structural relationships

How to deal with locally controlled vocabularies

Whether to use the PREMIS container

PREMIS and METS sections

You can’t put all PREMIS metadata directly under amdSec

What sections to use for PREMIS metadata?– Alternative 1

• Object in techMD• Event in digiProvMD• Rights in rightsMD• Agent with event or rights

– Alternative 2• Everything in digiProvMD

– Alternative 3• Everything in techMD

How many administrative MD sections to use?

Elements Defined in Both METS and PREMIS

METS PREMIS

METS: SIZE PREMIS: size

METS: CHECKSUM, CHECKSUMTYPE

PREMIS: fixity

METS: MIMETYPE PREMIS: <format>

METS ID/Idref: used to associate metadata in different sections and for different files

PREMIS identifiers: explicit linking between entity types

METS structMap: structural relationships, hierarchical, links the elements of the structure to content files and metadata

PREMIS <relationship>: all kinds of relationships, including structural

Should semantic units be recorded redundantly?

Options when there is overlap between PREMIS and another technical metadata schemas– Record only outside PREMIS (e.g. in METS)– Record only in PREMIS– Record in both

Are there advantages in using PREMIS semantic units?

Is it important to keep PREMIS metadata together as a unit? There may be an advantage for reuse and maintenance purposes

Will there be problems synchronizing updates?

Are they repeatable (e.g. attribute vs. element)?

Are they granular (e.g. Software name and version separately or together)

Overview

Introduction to Digital Preservation Metadata– What is Digital Preservation Metadata– Hands-on Exercise– Case Study: eJournals (1)

Preservation Metadata in Practice– Workflow Issues– Tools and Standards– PREMIS Data Dictionary– Overview

• Hands-on Exercise• Implementation Issues

– Case Study: eJournals (2)

Creating Metadata Profiles

3. Which standard do we use for which metadata?Has your organization adopted a metadata standard that supports digital preservation?Has your organization adopted a metadata container format?Are you adapting community tools for metadata processing?Which use cases are supported by which standard?Do you want to support duplicated information?

Question 3: Which standard do we use for which metadata?

For eJournals:

METS:

Structural relationships between files

File location

Digital library system identifiers

Basic technical metadata

Bundling up remaining metadata

Question 3: Which standard do we use for which metadata?

For eJournals:

MODS: Descriptive metadataNon-actionable, descriptive rightsRelationships between intellectual entities which describe structural or other semanticsIdentifiers of intellectual entitiesProvenance information of the record

Question 3: Which standard do we use for which metadata?

For eJournals:

PREMIS:

Events (provenance of the content)

Agents

Basic technical metadata

Specific technical metadata

Identifiers for AIP generations

Example Diagram

Article

Journal

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”series”>

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”series”>

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”preceding”>

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> generation

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> generation

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> generation

Issue

Manifes-tation

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:accessCondition>

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <mets:mdref>

<mets:amdSec> <mets:digiprovMD> <premis:object> <premis:relationship> <premis:relationshipSubType> manifestationOf

<premis: event><premis:eventType> metadataUpdate

<premis: event><premis:eventType> metadataUpdate

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”host”>

<mets:dmdSec> … <mods:relatedItem type=”host”>

metadataUpdateeventType>

Policy Files

Preservation Plan

File

METS File

Content File

PREMIS link

METS link

MODS link

Questions about Repository Design

Are you creating preservation metadata automatically or manually through user submission or input?

What will it take to make new or legacy digital objects ready for long-term preservation?

If you use a third-party repository application, does it accommodate your metadata needs? 

Does the system save metadata in archival storage along with content objects, as well as keeping a working copy to support repository operations?

Will the repository be able to export standards-conformant metadata according to published XML schema?

"The PREMIS Data Dictionary: Information you need to know for preserving digital documents" please use

the following license:This work is licenced under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of

this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ or send

a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California 94105, USA.

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